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Television and some online sources Television ERA Licence: BBC, ITV, Channel Four, E4, More 4 and Film 4, and Five Television. BUFVC Off-Air Recording Back-Up Service Online Arts on Film Archive, University of Westminster (Arts Council Documentary Film Collection) Instant Cinema Lux Online Tate Channel UbuWeb Vimeo, YouTube, etc.

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Cataloguing and access consistency in the application of international standards (e.g. AACR2, MARC21, DDC, LCSH, etc.) local guidelines for the cataloguing of video recordings (and artists’ multiples for some of these items) editing of derived records relevant and consistent selection of access points relevant and consistent subject and genre indexing loan vs. reference use: purchase licence conditions and other legal requirements, maximising access to expensive resources, preservation, etc. Closed access? Special Collection?

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Cataloguing and access 2

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Use and legislation Copyright: Films, videos and television programmes are protected by copyright legislation. In the UK, commercially produced video on any format (including VHS and DVD) can be shown for teaching purposes, as long as the audience consists of registered students only. Copying and adapting this material is not allowed without the permission of the copyright owner. The director and producer are the principal joint owners of copyright, and other people may own the copyright in parts of the programme, e.g., the screenplay or the music. If a programme is produced for an employer, copyright is owned by the employer. Copyright of a film lasts for 70 years after the death of the director, producer, screenwriter and composer of any original music.

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Use and legislation 2 Copyright : Copyright on television programmes expires after 50 years. Non-commercially produced videos are also protected by copyright. The conditions in which they can be used depend on the terms of the acquisition, and can be subject to a written contract. Artists’ film and video public performance, display and other rights are often offered for sale for institutions (including libraries), and can occasionally be a compulsory requisite for purchase.

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Use and legislation Censorship: The Video Recordings Act 1984 introduced compulsory video censorship in the UK. Since 1985, the supply of videos not classified by the BBFC (British Board of Film Classification) is a criminal offence, unless exempt, as is supplying a rated video to anyone under the age stated. The interpretation of the law to establish what material is not covered by it requires subjective judgement, and should only be applied in the context of institutional policies and guidelines. Off-air recordings made under the ERA Licence are not covered by this law (as television programmes are regulated by OFCOM).

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Preservation Archival role? most academic libraries have no formal archival role in this area a typical academic AV collection comprises mostly commercial pre-recorded VHS tapes and DVDs, and off-air recordings on both formats However, there is need to ensure that these materials are available for future use in teaching and research, and some material may be difficult to find or access in other public collections some older commercial material or off-air recordings may be or become rare or even unique (and it is difficult to identify as such) some collections include rare or unique copies of non-editioned original works made by the artists, on a variety of formats (e.g. degree showreels)

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Preservation 2 VHS and DVD were not designed as long term archival formats: migration of material to new copies, when legal (e.g. transferring VHS off-air recordings to DVD), and substitution of commercially available titles, when practicable, are partial remedial solutions. Equipment and format obsolescence pose a greater threat to video collections than media degradation factors: need for dedicated equipment for different formats and the pace of technological change could mean that in the long term video collections on cassette or disc formats will not be sustainable.

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Preservation 3 Future? For many years now (1990s-) the consensus principle for long term video preservation is that efforts must concentrate on the content, which can only be preserved by migration from analogue to digital formats (which in the case of material under copyright can only be achieved with the explicit agreement of the copyright holder). Digitisation? In house, cooperative projects, commercial digitisation services, third party online providers…